Full text: XVIIth ISPRS Congress (Part B4)

  
ANALYTIC STEREOMAPPING USING SPOT IMAGERY 
Yubiao Zhong 
Research Institute of Surveying & Mapping 
16 Beitaiping Road, Beijing 100039 
P.R, China 
Commission IV 
ABSTRACT 
Conventional stereophotogrammetric compilation is extended to acquire cartographic 
information from SPOT 
imagery. À practical approach characterized by a set of improved exterior orientation parameters, which are 
updated with time, 
Cartesian systems through polynomials is presented. 
and fast coordinate transformation between Gauss-Kruger and distortionless 
A 
(level 1A) is developed on the JX-3 Analytical Plotter, 
topographic map and a digital elevation model which has controlled the ZS-1 Orthoprojector to print an 
orthophoto, were produced, has proven feasibility of the method. 
spatial 
software designated to process stereo SPOT images 
and an experiment that with images taken in 1986 a 
KEY WORDS: Analytical, Polynormial, Photogrammetry, SPOT, Transformation. 
INTRODUCTION 
Stereophotogrammetric processing of SPOT imagery 
using an analytical plotter has been reported in a 
number of publications. Because of the complexity 
of SPOT imagery geometry and large ground coverage 
of each scene, conventional treatments for aerial 
frame photographs need to be reformed to fit the 
special requirement. Approaches for this purpose 
have been established according to different mathe- 
matic models, and satisfactory experimental results 
were obtained, as presented by Konecny et al. 
(1987), Li et al. (1988), and Kratky (1988). In 
this paper, a set of improved SPOT imagery orienta- 
tion parameters and the fast ground coordinate 
transformation, which have been tested with real 
image data, are introduced, and the implementation 
on the JX-3 Analytical Plotter and ZS-1 Orthopro- 
jector manufactured in China is described. 
MATHEMATICAL FOUNDATION 
In case of aerial frame photography, the only 6 ex- 
terior orientation elements of each image of stereo 
pair are determined by 3 or more control points, 
and thereupon the stereophotogrammetric terrain 
model, in which 3-dimensional object coordinates of 
a ground point are measured, can be reconstructed. 
A SPOT image, however, is characterized by dynamic 
scanning, as illustrated in Figure 1. Its exterior 
    
Se te 
Orbit 
Figure 1. SPOT Imaging and Covered Ground Scene 
orientation is variant along the orbital track. In 
addition, the ground scene of a SPOT image covers 
60 by 60 km rather than 10 by 10 km of a usual aer- 
ial photograph with which a map projection  coordi- 
nate system such as Gauss-Kruger is usually used 
directly for photogrammetric processing. A distor- 
tion-free rectangular 3-dimensional coordinate 
280 
system should be selected for processing SPOT 
images, and the results are finally converted into 
desired map coordinates. 
Exterior Orientation Parameters 
  
A SPOT panchromatic image, which is scanned by lin- 
early arrayed CCD sensors in continued 9.024 sec- 
onds, includes 6000 scanning lines, each of which 
is similar geometrically to & frame photograph with 
six elements of exterior orientation (the camera 
station coordinates Xs, Ys, Zs, and rotation angles 
$, Q, K). While an image is being taken, the satel- 
lite moves steadily along an elliptic orbit, with 
slightly changing flight attitudes. Within an 
image, exterior orientations of scanning lines are 
highly correlated, and each of the six elements of 
a line is expressed as a linear function of time in 
most previous treatments. After analyzing the sat- 
ellite ephemeris and experimenting with a real 
image pair, the quadric polynomial model is intro- 
duced here. Table 1 shows the root-mean-square er- 
rors (RMSEs) of experimental results, where mS= 
4mX? *mY? 4mZ? , 
For SPOT level 1A images, the origin of image coor- 
dinates is the scene center, and the y-axis is 
defined parallel to scanning direction. Therefore, 
six elements of exterior orientation of any scan- 
line can be expressed separately as a function of 
image ordinate y: 
XszXso tk, ytk; y? 
Ys=Ys, +k; y+ke v2 
Zs-Zso tkeytk, y? 
$-6o 4k, ytko y^ (1) 
QzQo *ks yk, y? 
K=Ko +k, Y+k, y* 
where 
XSo, YSo, ZSo, to, Ro, and Korepresent the ele- 
ments of exterior orientation of center line of 
the scene; and ki, ka, ..., kig are linear and 
quadric coefficients of variation. 
These 18 parameters give the exterior orientation 
of a SPOT iamge. 
Mutual Transformations between Gauss-Kruger 
and Spatial Cartesian Coordinates 
  
Gauss-Kruger projection is used in topographic maps 
of 1:500,000 and larger scales in China. A topocen- 
tric Cartesian system (TCS) (shown in Figure 2) 
whose origin is located at the center of stereopair 
overlap is preferably chosen as an object-space 
a 
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